We did look at that guy's boat. I really liked it and thought it had sexy lines but my wife was turned off by the galley arrangement and the lack of a deck.

This guy also says he's been across the Atlantic, which surprises me a bit since all he had for a compass was a shard of lodestone floating on a piece of wood in a bowl of water, mentioned something about low-tech being good for the environment.

We did also look at a multihull which my wife really liked. It was spacious and even came with a chart plotter (sort of) but I can't get over worrying about what would happen if it flipped over. Call me old-fashioned but I prefer monohulls.

To answer the original question: after carefully reviewing your answers to questions that we all face from time to time and finding them more than two standard deviations from normal answers we can answer in the affirmative. You are crazy.

What do you think about this one? I hear they have problems with their rudders falling off which makes me nervous, but my wife really likes the separate shower.

If you do more maintenance on the rudder than on other boats they will not fall, Anyway if you took apart and inspect the rudder every year even so it would be a small fraction of the work and cost you will have maintaining the Caravel. Contrary to the Caravel you will not need more 5 or 6 guys to sail the boat and the Hunter will be faster and more seaworthy. After all even an Hunter is a better sailing boat than a XIV century sailing craft